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Originally the title was conferred for most of class of officers in the ] of medieval ]. The ] appointed officers with various titles, and Barua meant a ''"Leader of 3000 men"''. Originally the title was conferred for most of class of officers in the ] of medieval ]. The ] appointed officers with various titles, and Barua meant a ''"Leader of 3000 men"''.


The Baruas are ] by faith and have been a key contributors to the growth of Assamese community. Being a conferred surname, it is widely found to be used across various groups within Assamese community however, with subtle distinctions relating to a group. For instance, ] Baruas or may even ] are classified as ], as opposed to ] and ] falling under ] ] and are ]. Furthermore, Brahmin Baruas may additionally carry ] / prefixes such as, Bez, Bujar, Govinda, Ranjan, etc., traditionally not or less likely present among Kalitas, Ahoms and Sutiyas. The Baruas are ] by faith and have been a key contributors to the growth of Assamese community. Being a conferred surname, it is widely found to be used across various groups within Assamese community however, with subtle distinctions relating to a group. For instance, ] Baruas or may even ] are classified as ], as opposed to ] and ] falling under ] ] and are ].


===Notable Baruas=== ===Notable Baruas===

Revision as of 16:37, 10 September 2016

This article is about the Barua surname of Assam Valley, India. For the Bengali Baruah caste an ethnic minority (particularly Bangladesh), see Barua (Bangladesh). Ethnic group
Barua
বৰুৱা
बरूवा
Languages
Assamese

(and dialects; KamrupiGoalpariya)

Hindi English
Religion
Hinduism ( Traditional Panentheistic)
Related ethnic groups
Asamiya
(Assamese BrahminsAhomsKalitasSutiya)
Indo-Aryans
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Barua (Template:Lang-as; Template:Lang-hi) which is also spelled as Baruah, Barooah, Baruwa, Baroova, Barooa, Baroowa, Borooah, Boruah, Baroa; is a common Assamese surname. The surname Barua is typically associated with someone who is an Assamese or Asamiya, much like Aroras of Punjab.

In Assam Valley

Originally the title was conferred for most of class of officers in the Ahom kingdom of medieval Assam. The Ahoms appointed officers with various titles, and Barua meant a "Leader of 3000 men".

The Baruas are Hindus by faith and have been a key contributors to the growth of Assamese community. Being a conferred surname, it is widely found to be used across various groups within Assamese community however, with subtle distinctions relating to a group. For instance, Assamese Brahmin Baruas or may even Kalitas are classified as General, as opposed to Ahoms and Sutiyas falling under Tibetan and Tai families and are OBC.

Notable Baruas

See also

References

  1. "639 Identifier Documentation: aho – ISO 639-3". SIL International (formerly known as the Summer Institute of Linguistics). SIL International. Retrieved 2019-06-29. Ahom
  2. "Population by Religious Communities". Census India – 2001. Ministry of Home Affairs, Government of India. Retrieved 2019-07-01. Census Data Finder/C Series/Population by Religious Communities
  3. "Population by religion community – 2011". Census of India, 2011. The Registrar General & Census Commissioner, India. Archived from the original on 25 August 2015. 2011census/C-01/DDW00C-01 MDDS.XLS

External links

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